| bio | website | vuiis.vanderbilt.edu/~dss |
|---|---|---|
| location | Vanderbilt University, TN | |
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 5 months |
| seen | Mar 22 at 19:18 | |
| stats | profile views | 3 |
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Dec 19 |
answered | What is the term for when one letter is lowercased when a name is in all caps? |
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Dec 18 |
awarded | Editor |
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Dec 18 |
comment |
Vulgar way of saying “he killed himself” "Fucked" > "fucked up", but neither implies certain death. |
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Dec 18 |
revised |
Vulgar way of saying “he killed himself” added 260 characters in body |
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Dec 18 |
awarded | Critic |
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Dec 18 |
comment |
Vulgar way of saying “he killed himself” This is not really vulgar by current norms. |
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Dec 18 |
comment |
Vulgar way of saying “he killed himself” I think both are acceptable mobspeak. ;-) |
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Dec 18 |
comment |
Vulgar way of saying “he killed himself” I think this is typically used in relation to suicide. |
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Dec 18 |
comment |
Vulgar way of saying “he killed himself” I think it is fascinating that proper English doesn't really have a vulgar word for death. We have to look to slang for something anywhere close to what OP wants. |
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Dec 18 |
comment |
Vulgar way of saying “he killed himself” No, not really. The OP said the character killed himself, so I was assuming it was his fault. Perhaps the OP can clarify whether it is an unfortunate accident or the result of poor decisions. |
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Dec 18 |
comment |
“Be not” or “is not”? Well played, tchrist. :-) I'll assume you are referring to the possibly extraneous second comma that I left in. I deleted the one obvious unnecessary comma, but I left the second possible unnecessary one in because it does affect the reading and meaning slightly, and I didn't know which the OP intended. |
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Dec 18 |
answered | Vulgar way of saying “he killed himself” |
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Dec 17 |
answered | “Be not” or “is not”? |
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Dec 17 |
answered | A quantity followed by a measurement (eg: 200 35mm circles) |
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Dec 17 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Dec 15 |
comment |
Word for “person that I supervise” @Jim, good point. Perhaps someone with Greek or Latin fluency can make up a word for us with the precise meaning OP intended. |
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Dec 15 |
answered | Word for “person that I supervise” |
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Dec 14 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Dec 14 |
answered | What's the noun for an animal's personality? |